An Ancient Example. A Living Transmission.
The Jesui
Path
"I and the Father are one."
The Jesui Path is a path of direct transmission where people encounter the unity Christ embodied, not through doctrine, but through their own living experience of it.
The Jesui Path is religion in its truest sense.
It is a mystery school in its deepest function.
When Jesus said this, he wasn't speaking poetically. He was describing what he knew to be true about the nature of reality: that the life animating everything that exists is the same life animating you. That there is no real separation between you and God, between you and others, between you and the world you move through. The sense of separation feels real, but it is the one thing that is not.
What made Christ remarkable wasn't his miracles. It was that he actually lived from this knowing. You could see it in how he treated people, the ones that others looked past or pushed away. He didn't see them as separate from himself, so he didn't treat them that way. He walked through the world without the wall that most of us carry, the one that keeps us safe and also keeps us alone.
The Jesui Path doesn't ask you to believe any of this. Belief isn't the point. The point is to find out for yourself whether it's true.
When someone starts living from this place, even a little, things change in ways that are hard to put into words. There's more warmth with people, even strangers. More patience. More genuine interest. It's not that you become a better person by trying harder to be one. It's more that the distance you used to feel starts to thin, and with it goes a lot of the friction that was always there underneath.
There's also something else, something close to what Jesus was pointing at when he talked about the lilies of the field and the birds of the air. A quiet sense that you're going to be okay. That life isn't something you have to fight your way through. That there is enough, that there has always been enough, and that you are part of something that knows how to take care of itself.
The deepest thing the path moves toward is learning to love the way Christ loved. Not sentimentally, not as a moral achievement, but as a natural expression of recognizing that the love you feel is not entirely your own. It is moving through you. That distinction, between you doing the loving and love moving through you, is one of the things the path eventually makes clear.
"Can you learn to love the way he loved?" The Central Question
There are practices here. Real ones, drawn from people who have walked this kind of path and found what actually works, not what sounds good. Some feel like initiation. Others are simple enough that you might miss them at first. All of them point in the same direction.
They're not requirements. This path doesn't ask you to adopt a system or check certain boxes. What it asks is that you're sincere, and that you're willing to let what you find actually change you. Those two things turn out to be rarer than they sound.
Christ is here not as someone to worship but as someone who showed us what this looks like in a human life. The question the Jesui Path keeps returning to isn't whether you believe in him. It's whether you can learn to love the way he loved.
To live as a Jesui isn't to join something or sign onto a set of beliefs. It's to recognize something you have probably already sensed, in yourself, in moments of genuine connection, in the strange feeling that the world is more alive and more unified than we usually let ourselves admit.
If this is true for you, you already know it. You don't need to be convinced.